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Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

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Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2
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Page 1: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Chapter 2Chapter 2

Essential Chemistry for Biology

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 2: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Biology and Society: Fluoride in the Water

– Fluoride• Is a common ingredient in

Earth’s crust• Helps maintain healthy teeth• Prevents cavities by• Affecting the metabolism of

oral bacteria• Promoting the replacement

of lost minerals on the tooth surface

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 3: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Matter: Elements and Compounds

–Matter is anything that occupies space and has mass.–Matter is found on the Earth in three physical

states:• Solid , Liquid, & Gas

– Matter is composed of chemical elements.• Elements are substances that cannot be broken

down into other substances.• There are 92 naturally occurring elements on Earth.

– All of the elements are listed in the periodic table.Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 4: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

H

Rb

K

Na

Li

Fr

Cs

Sr

Ca

Mg

Be

Ra

Ba

Y

Sc

Ac

La

Zr

Ti

Rf

Hf

Nb

V

Db

Ta

Mo

Cr

Sg

W

Tc

Mn

Bh

Re

Ru

Fe

Hs

Os

Rh

Co

Mt

Ir

Pd

Ni

Uun

Pt

Xe

Kr

Uuo

Rn

Ag

Cu

Uuu

Au

Cd

Zn

Uub

Hg

Ar

Ne

In

Ga

Tl

Al

B

Sn

Ge

Uuq

Pb

Si

C

Sb

As

Bi

P

N

Te

Se

Uuh

Po

S

O

I

Br

At

Cl

F

He

Th

Ce

Pa

Pr

U

Nd

Np

Pm

Pu

Sm

Am

Eu

Lr

Lu

Cm

Gd

Bk

Tb

Cf

Dy

Es

Ho

Fm

Er

Md

Tm

No

Yb

6

C12

Figure 2.1Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 5: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Elements

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 6: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Carbon C: 18.5%

Hydrogen H:9.5%

Nitrogen N:3.3%

Calcium Ca: 1.5%

Trace elements: less than 0.01%Boron B Manganese Mn

Oxygen O:65.0%

Magnesium Mg: 0.1%

Phosphorus P: 1.0%Potassium K: 0.4%Sulfur S: 0.3%Sodium Na: 0.2%Chlorine Cl: 0.2%

Cobalt CoChromium Cr

Iron FeIodine IFluorine FCopper Cu Silicon Si

Zinc ZnVanadium VTin Sn

Molybdenum MoSelenium Se

Figure 2.2Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 7: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Elements– Twenty-five elements are essential to life.– Four elements make up about 96% of the

weight of the human body:• Oxygen, Carbon, Hydrogen, & Nitrogen

– Trace elements• Occur in smaller amounts• Are essential for life

–An iodine deficiency causes goiter.

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 8: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Figure 2.3Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 9: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Compounds

– Elements can combine to form compounds.• Compounds are substances that contain two or

more elements in a fixed ratio.• Common compounds include–NaCl (table salt)–H2O (water)

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 10: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Atoms

– Each element consists of one kind of atom.• An atom is the smallest unit of matter that still

retains the properties of an element.

–Atoms are composed of subatomic particles.• A proton is positively charged.• An electron is negatively charged.• A neutron is electrically neutral.

–Most atoms have protons and neutrons packed tightly into the nucleus.• The nucleus is the atom’s central core.• Electrons orbit the nucleus.

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 11: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Nucleus

Protons

Neutrons

Electrons

Nucleus

Cloud of negativecharge 2 electrons

2

2

2

Figure 2.4Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 12: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Proton• Positive charge• Determines element

Neutron• No charge• Determines isotope

Electron• Negative charge• Participates in chemical reactions• Outer-shell electrons determine chemical behavior

Nucleus• Consists of neutrons and protons

Atom

Figure UN2-5Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 13: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Subatomic Particles

– Elements differ in the number of subatomic particles in their atoms.• The number of protons, the atomic number,

determines which element it is.• An atom’s mass number is the sum of the

number of protons and neutrons.• Mass is a measure of the amount of matter in

an object.

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 14: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Isotopes

– Isotopes are alternate mass forms of an element.– Isotopes have the same number of protons

and electrons, but they have a different number of neutrons.

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 15: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Table 2.1Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 16: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Radioactive Isotopes– The nucleus of a radioactive isotope decays, giving off

particles and energy.– Radioactive isotopes have many uses in research and

medicine.• They can be used to determine the fate of atoms in

living organisms.• They are used in PET scans to diagnose heart disorders

and some cancers.– Uncontrolled exposure to radioactive isotopes can

harm living organisms by damaging DNA.• Naturally occurring radon gas may cause lung cancer.

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 17: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Electron Arrangement and the Chemical Properties of Atoms– Electrons determine how an atom behaves

when it encounters other atoms.– Electrons orbit the nucleus of an atom in

specific electron shells.– The farther an electron is from the nucleus,

the greater its energy.– The number of electrons in the outermost

shell determines the chemical properties of an atom.

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Page 18: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

First electron shellcan hold 2 electrons

Outer electron shellcan hold 8 electrons

Hydrogen HAtomic number = 1

Carbon CAtomic number = 6

Nitrogen NAtomic number = 7

Oxygen OAtomic number = 8

Electron

Figure 2.5Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 19: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Chemical Bonding and Molecules

–Chemical reactions enable atoms to give up or acquire electrons to complete their outer shells.–Chemical reactions usually result in atoms• Staying close together• Being held together by chemical bonds

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 20: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Ionic Bonds

–When an atom loses or gains electrons, it becomes electrically charged.• Charged atoms are called ions.• Ionic bonds are formed between oppositely

charged ions.

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Animation: Ionic Bonds

Page 21: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Outer shellhas 1 electron

Outer shellhas 7 electrons

The outer electron is strippedfrom sodium and completesthe chlorine atom’s outer shell

NaSodium atom

ClChlorine atom

Completeouter shells

The attractionbetween theions—an ionicbond—holdsthem together

Na

Sodium ionCl

Chlorine ion

Sodium chloride (NaCl)

Figure 2.6-2Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 22: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Covalent Bonds

– A covalent bond forms when two atoms share one or more pairs of outer-shell electrons.

– Atoms held together by covalent bonds form a molecule.

– The number of covalent bonds an atom can form is equal to the number of additional electrons needed to fill its outer shell.

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Animation: Covalent Bonds

Blast Animation: Covalent Bonds

Page 23: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Electron sharing

Atoms joined into a moleculevia covalent bonds

Figure UN2-7Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 24: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Namemolecular formula

Hydrogen gas H2

Oxygen gas O2

Methane CH4

Electron configuration Structural formula Space-filling model Ball-and-stick model

Single bonda pair of shared electrons

Double bondtwo pairs of shared electrons

Figure 2.7Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 25: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Hydrogen Bonds

–Water is a compound in which the electrons in its covalent bonds are shared unequally.• This causes water to be a polar molecule, one with

opposite charges on opposite ends.

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Animation: Water Structure

Blast Animation: Hydrogen Bonds in Water

Page 26: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

H H

O

slightly slightly

slightly –Figure UN2-2

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 27: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

2 H2 2 H2OO2

Hydrogengas

Oxygengas

Water

ProductsReactants

Figure UN2-3Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 28: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Hydrogen Bonds

– The polarity of water results in weak electrical attractions between neighboring water molecules.

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Hydrogen bond

Page 29: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Chemical Reactions

–Cells constantly rearrange molecules by breaking existing chemical bonds and forming new ones.• Such changes in the chemical composition of

matter are called chemical reactions.–Chemical reactions include• Reactants, the starting materials• Products, the end materials• Chemical reactions can rearrange matter but cannot

create or destroy matter.

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 30: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

WATER AND LIFE– Life on Earth began in

water and evolved there for 3 billion years.• Modern life remains

tied to water.• Your cells are composed

of 70%–95% water.

– The abundance of water is a major reason Earth is habitable.

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 31: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Water’s Life-Supporting Properties– The polarity of water molecules and the hydrogen bonding

that results explain most of water’s life-supporting properties.• Water molecules stick together.• Water has a strong resistance to change in

temperature.• Frozen water floats.• Water is a common solvent for life.

– Water molecules stick together as a result of hydrogen bonding.• This is called cohesion.• Cohesion is vital for water transport in plants.

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 32: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Microscopic tubes

Cohesion due tohydrogen bondsbetween watermolecules

Evaporation from the leaves

SEM

Flow

of w

ater

Figure 2.10Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 33: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Surface Tension

– The measure of how difficult it is to stretch or break the surface of a liquid.• Hydrogen bonds

give water an unusually high surface tension.

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 34: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

How Water Moderates Temperature

– Because of hydrogen bonding, water has a strong resistance to temperature change.

– Heat and temperature are related, but different.• Heat is the amount of energy associated with the movement of the

atoms and molecules in a body of matter.• Temperature measures the intensity of heat.

– Water can absorb and store large amounts of heat while only changing a few degrees in temperature.

– Water can moderate temperatures.• Earth’s giant water supply causes temperatures to stay within limits

that permit life.• Evaporative cooling removes heat from the Earth and from organisms.

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 35: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Figure 2.12Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 36: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

The Biological Significance of Ice Floating

–When water molecules get cold enough, they move apart, forming ice.–A chunk of ice has fewer molecules than an

equal volume of liquid water. – Ice floats because it is less dense than the

liquid water around it.• If ice did not float, ponds, lakes, and even the

oceans would freeze solid.• Life in water could not survive if bodies of water

froze solid.Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 37: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Hydrogen bond

Liquid water Ice

Figure 2.13Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 38: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Water as the Solvent of Life

–A solution is a liquid consisting of a homogeneous mixture of two or more substances.• The dissolving agent is the solvent.• The dissolved substance is the solute.

–When water is the solvent, the result is an aqueous solution.

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 39: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Sodium ion in solution

Chloride ion in solution

Salt crystal

Na

Na

Cl–Cl–

Figure 2.14Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 40: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

The Process of Science: Can Exercise Boost Your Brain Power?

–Observation: Human brains shrink as we age.–Question: Can aerobic exercise slow or reverse

brain loss?–Hypothesis: MRI scans would reveal

differences between people who regularly exercised aerobically and those who did not.–Prediction: Brains of active people would

shrink less than the brains of less active people.

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 41: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

The Process of Science: Can Exercise Boost Your Brain Power?

– Experiment: Twenty-nine people in their 60s and 70s exercised for three one-hour sessions per week. A control group of 29 people engaged in non-aerobic stretching exercises for the same periods.–Results: The aerobic group showed significant

increases in brain volume compared to the non-aerobic group.

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 42: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Figure 2.15Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 43: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Acids, Bases, pH & Buffers– A chemical compound that releases H+ to solution is

an acid.– A compound that accepts H+ and removes it from

solution is a base.– To describe the acidity of a solution, chemists use

the pH scale.– Buffers are substances that resist pH change.• Accept H+ ions when they are in excess • Donate H+ ions when they are depleted

– Increases in global CO2 concentrations may lead to the acidification of the oceans.

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 44: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Basicsolution

Neutralsolution

Acidicsolution

Oven cleaner

Householdbleach

Human bloodPure water

Grapefruit juice,soft drinkLemon juice,gastric juice

Household ammonia

Milk of magnesia

Seawater

Tomato juice

Urine

pH scale0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

14

Incr

easi

ngly

aci

dic

gre

ater

H c

once

ntra

tion

Incr

easi

ngly

bas

icl

ower

H c

once

ntra

tion

Neutral[H+] [OH–]

Figure 2.16Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 45: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Basicsolution

Neutralsolution

Acidicsolution

Figure 2.16aLaura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 46: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Figure 2.17Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 47: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Evolution Connection: The Search for Extraterrestrial Life

– If life similar to ours has evolved elsewhere in the universe, then it too would depend upon water.–Recent NASA missions to Mars have

detected evidence that liquid water flowed over the planet’s surface.

Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2

Page 48: Chapter 2 Essential Chemistry for Biology Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2.

Figure 2.18Laura Coronado Bio 10 Chapter 2


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